In The News: College of Liberal Arts
Less than half of all societies kiss with their lips, according to a study of 168 cultures from around the world.
Sophia Calloway moved from Cincinnati to Phoenix last year to be closer to her parents, who relocated from Ohio to the Arizona desert three years earlier for new jobs.
Sophia Calloway moved from Cincinnati to Phoenix last year to be closer to her parents, who relocated from Ohio to the Arizona desert three years earlier for new jobs.
Intimate performances once radiated the essence of Palm Springs cool.
If an ambitious amendment to Minneapolis’s city charter passes this year — the Public Safety Charter Amendment — one of two things will happen, depending on your take on the amendment.
September is Suicide Prevention Month. Suicide has long been a problem in Nevada.
"Invisible No More," the first book of its kind to detail the extensive Black history at the University of South Carolina, is set to be released in November.
In the wake of the shooting in Plymouth, that resulted in the deaths of five people and then later the shooter himself, as is frequently the case, the media turned it’s focus onto the ‘why’.
After nearly 20 years, what started with retaliation following the 9/11 terror attacks ended with a chaotic evacuation and a Taliban takeover.
From the moment that Tsars as well as hierarchs realized that having their subjects go to confession could make them better citizens as well as better Christians, the sacrament of penance in the Russian empire became a political tool, a devotional exercise, a means of education, and a literary genre.
To ban, or not to ban, that was a question this month for the popular OnlyFans website, which announced a prohibition on explicit content only to reverse itself days later.
The Foundation for Women's Leadership & Empowerment (FWLE) announced today that support from Aristocrat Technologies Inc. and the Las Vegas Review-Journal will help sponsor 20 college students to attend the 14th Annual Women's Leadership Conference (WLC).